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Dad Lets His Daughter Go Hungry After a Dinner Choice Backfires

by Charles Butler
November 17, 2025
in Social Issues

A family dinner turned into a miniature showdown that no one expected. A single dad wanted to teach a life lesson. His nine-year-old daughter just wanted dinner that didn’t make her gag. What happened next left the internet divided.

Here’s the setup. A local deli sells creative, seasonal sausages. The dad and his daughter usually enjoy trying different flavors together.

On this particular day, she picked an adventurous one loaded with olives and feta. She insisted she wanted it. Dad knew she probably wouldn’t like it. He also believed letting her try and fail was part of growing up.

But once the sausage hit her plate, the dinner lesson spiraled. She gagged, begged for something else, asked for his food instead, then forced down half while sweating from trying so hard. He kept refusing to offer anything else. She eventually gave up and went to bed hungry.

Was this tough love or unnecessary rigidity? Reddit did not hold back.

Now, read the full story:

Dad Lets His Daughter Go Hungry After a Dinner Choice Backfires
Not the actual photoAITA for letting my stubborn daughter go to bed hungry?

A local deli or bakery near us makes "fancy" sausages. It's all homemade and they come in seasonal flavors.

We get them occasionally because they are not terribly priced at three dollars per sausage. Not that it matters. My favourite is the pear cinnamon sausage.

My daughter, nine years old, likes them too. Her favourite is the Hawaiian one.

Just to clarify, they are pork sausages, just with extra stuff to make them special.

We went there two days ago and I asked my daughter to pick out two sausages for her, and I would pick two for me. She insisted on getting the...

She recently had gyros for the first time and I guess she equated that flavor with everything Greek. The Greek sausage has black olive, feta, and balsamic in it.

I asked if she was certain and she insisted. I knew it would go poorly later that night, but I thought this would be a valuable lesson.

I got my favourite sausages. She got something new.

Well, she hated it. She took one bite and fake gagged.

I told her I warned her. She asked if she could have mine, but then I would be stuck with the Greek sausage. I told her no deal.

She himmed and hawed for fifteen minutes before asking me to make her something else. I am not a restaurant, you eat what I make, plus she picked it herself.

She either ate it or had nothing else for the rest of the night.

She ended up eating half of one and legitimately had sweats from forcing herself before I relented and let her leave the table.

I am a single father so I cannot check in with a spouse to see if I was wrong.

This is how I was raised and I thought this would teach her to play it safe with food. If she wants to get adventurous, that is on her.

But she is also only nine. I do not think I made the wrong decision, but did I?

This situation hits a familiar parenting crossroads.

Every caregiver wants to teach responsibility. Every kid wants dinner that doesn’t taste like punishment. When those two instincts collide, emotions flare quickly, especially in a one-parent household where decision fatigue is real.

What stands out most is how hard the girl tried. Sweating while forcing down food is not a power struggle anymore. That is discomfort. And discomfort tends to stick in a child’s memory long after the lesson fades. Kids remember how they felt around food, not the nutritional logic behind it.

This dad clearly loves his daughter, cooks for her, and tries to guide her.
But this moment shows how easy it is to slide into “teaching a lesson” mode and forget to pivot when the situation stops being educational and starts being distressing.

And that fragile space is where the internet stepped in.

Food, childhood autonomy, and parental authority form one of the trickiest emotional triangles in a household. When a child chooses something new and ends up disliking it, a parent faces the choice between enforcing responsibility and offering care. Both values matter. The challenge lies in balancing them.

In this case, the dad wanted to reinforce the idea that choices have consequences. Many parents share that instinct. Developmentally, kids around age nine are just beginning to understand delayed consequences and independent decision-making. Trying new foods supports confidence, curiosity, and the ability to evaluate new experiences without fear.

But the second half of this situation reveals the deeper psychological layer. A child gagging or sweating while trying to force themselves to finish something is not stubbornness. That is a stress response. According to child nutrition expert Ellyn Satter, “A child’s job is to decide whether and how much to eat. A parent’s job is to decide what, where, and when food is offered.”

This framework, known as the Division of Responsibility, is widely used in pediatrics, therapy, and nutrition counseling. It helps kids develop a lifelong healthy relationship with food by focusing on exposure rather than pressure. When a child feels forced to finish something they dislike, research shows it increases food anxiety and decreases willingness to try new things in the future.

A 2017 study published in Appetite found that pressure to eat “promotes negative feelings about food, increases picky eating, and reduces dietary variety.”

In other words, the lesson this father hoped to teach might backfire. Instead of learning to make smarter choices, a child may learn fear around unfamiliar foods or shame around expressing discomfort.

Clinical psychologist Dr. Becky Kennedy often discusses this dynamic. She explains: “When kids take a risk and regret it, they need connection, not consequence. That is what helps them learn for next time.”

This doesn’t mean parents must abandon structure or turn mealtime into a buffet. Offering a simple fallback food, like toast, yogurt, or fruit, is a middle-ground solution many experts suggest. It keeps boundaries intact without linking food exploration to punishment or distress.

Another element to consider is the emotional context. The father mentioned being a single parent, and parenting without another adult’s feedback increases stress and rigidity. Research from the Journal of Family Issues notes that single parents often feel pressure to “stay consistent at all costs,” even when the situation calls for flexibility.

This instinct is understandable, but children interpret rigidity as emotional distance, not stability.

A healthier approach in this situation could have looked like this:

  • Allow the child to choose two sausages, but make one familiar and one adventurous.

  • Let her try the new one without pressure to finish it.

  • Offer a standard backup meal she can prepare herself.

  • Revisit the experience later with curiosity instead of frustration.

The real lesson isn’t “don’t try new foods.” It’s “trying new things is safe, even if you don’t like them.”

In the end, parenting is not about always being right. It’s about creating a home where kids feel safe making mistakes, safe expressing discomfort, and safe coming back to try again next time.

This story highlights a universal reminder. Children learn best when security and structure work together instead of battling for control.

Check out how the community responded:

Many commenters felt the child’s age made the situation unfair. They argued the daughter tried something new, and punishing her for that defeated the purpose of encouraging growth.

Ricoret - YTA. Why be so mean? She is only nine and tried something new. You could have made her toast when it was clear she hated it.

judgy_mcjudgypants - YTA. Why is "playing it safe" a good thing? The only lesson she learns is that her dad is being [the jerk].

[Reddit User] - YTA. She is nine and you should be encouraging her to try new things. Not punishing her for it.

Darkdreams28 - INFO. What lesson were you even trying to teach? To avoid new foods?

This group focused on guiding kids, not setting them up to fail. They said a balanced choice would have prevented the meltdown.

Arthur_Bird - YTA. The smart move is one safe sausage and one new one. Then she learns without suffering.

TheHorseBandit  YTA. Not for refusing to trade, but she could have made a sandwich. You should have guided her instead of trapping her.

Maebyfunke37 - What was the intended lesson? If you were so sure she would hate it, why not let her pick one normal and one Greek?

People worried the dad unintentionally created shame around eating. Several referenced long-term impacts like food anxiety or disordered patterns.

clovercats - YTA. Let her have cereal or make a sandwich. You risk creating an eating disorder or making her afraid to try new things.

[Reddit User] - YTA. You knew this would go badly. Feed the child.

[Reddit User] - Dude, YTA. She is nine. You do not need to be a restaurant, but you do need to feed her. A sandwich would not hurt.

This dinner disagreement turned into a broader conversation about how kids learn, how parents teach, and where the line sits between responsibility and compassion. Mistakes, especially tiny ones involving food, help children develop curiosity and independence.

But those lessons work best when a child feels safe, not when they push themselves to the point of stress just to avoid disappointing a parent.

The dad’s intentions came from love, but the outcome showed how quickly a teaching moment can shift into something overwhelming for a child.

Parenting requires flexibility, especially around food, where pressure can easily overshadow the lesson. A child who feels supported when trying new things becomes braver next time, not more cautious.

So what do you think? Should a nine-year-old finish what she picked, even if she hates it? Or should the dad have offered a simple backup and turned this into a gentler learning moment?

Charles Butler

Charles Butler

Hey there, fellow spotlight seekers! As the PIC of our social issues beat—and a guy who's dived headfirst into journalism and media studies—I'm obsessed with unpacking how we chase thrills, swap stories, and tangle with the big, messy debates of inequality, justice, and resilience, whether on screens or over drinks in a dive bar. Life's an endless, twisty reel, so I love spotlighting its rawest edges in words. Growing up on early internet forums and endless news scrolls, I'm forever blending my inner fact-hoarder with the restless wanderer itching to uncover every hidden corner of the world.

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